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Smoking and Mental Illness: A Population-Based Prevalence Study

Smoking and Mental Illness: A Population-Based Prevalence Study Abstract Context Studies of selected groups of persons with mental illness, such as those who are institutionalized or seen in mental health clinics, have reported rates of smoking to be higher than in persons without mental illness. However, recent population-based, nationally representative data are lacking. Objective To assess rates of smoking and tobacco cessation in adults, with and without mental illness. Design, Setting, and Participants Analysis of data on 4411 respondents aged 15 to 54 years from the National Comorbidity Survey, a nationally representative multistage probability survey conducted from 1991 to 1992. Main Outcome Measures Rates of smoking and tobacco cessation according to the number and type of psychiatric diagnoses, assessed by a modified version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Results Current smoking rates for respondents with no mental illness, lifetime mental illness, and past-month mental illness were 22.5%, 34.8%, and 41.0%, respectively. Lifetime smoking rates were 39.1%, 55.3%, and 59.0%, respectively (P<.001 for all comparisons). Smokers with any history of mental illness had a self-reported quit rate of 37.1% (P = .04), and smokers with past-month mental illness had a self-reported quit rate of 30.5% (P<.001) compared with smokers without mental illness (42.5%). Odds ratios for current and lifetime smoking in respondents with mental illness in the past month vs respondents without mental illness, adjusted for age, sex, and region of the country, were 2.7 (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.3-3.1) and 2.7 (95% CI, 2.4-3.2), respectively. Persons with a mental disorder in the past month consumed approximately 44.3% of cigarettes smoked by this nationally representative sample. Conclusions Persons with mental illness are about twice as likely to smoke as other persons but have substantial quit rates. Smoking is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States.1 In an effort to target public health interventions, recent studies have focused on smoking in distinct populations, such as pregnant women2 and adolescents.3 We believe those with mental illness are another group that merits special attention. Previous studies have found high smoking rates among selected populations of persons with mental illness, such as psychiatric outpatients4 and patients in a state mental hospital.5 Others have found elevated smoking rates among patients with specific diagnoses, such as bipolar illness, depression, schizophrenia, and panic disorder.6-11 Persons with mental illness may encounter greater difficulty with tobacco cessation.4,12,13 However, no recent study has analyzed rates of smoking and quit rates across the spectrum of psychiatric diagnoses in a nationally representative sample. We hypothesized that persons with mental illness smoke at higher rates than persons without mental illness, have lower quit rates, and comprise a large proportion of the US tobacco market. We used population-based data from the National Comorbidity Survey14 (NCS) to examine the association between type and severity of mental illness and the likelihood of smoking and subsequent cessation. The NCS differed from previous studies because it was the first to administer a structured psychiatric interview to a nationally representative sample.15 Furthermore, the NCS was specifically designed to examine both substance-use and nonsubstance-use psychiatric disorders. Methods Data Sources The NCS was a congressionally mandated study of the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in the United States.15 Administered between September 1990 and February 1992, the survey used a stratified, multistage probability sample of persons aged 15 to 54 years in the noninstitutionalized civilian population. The data were released for public use in 1998. The study design allowed for estimation of the national prevalence of mental illness as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition, Revised (DSM-III-R).16 The NCS surveyed 8098 persons. Questions regarding tobacco use were asked of the 4411 respondents interviewed during the latter half of the survey (1991-1992). Specially trained staff from the Survey Research Center at the University of Michigan administered a modified version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI).17 The CIDI is a well-validated, structured diagnostic interview based on the Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS), which was used in the Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study.18 In the NCS, the overall response rate was 82.4%; nonrespondents resembled respondents in age and sex, which are the only demographic variables available for all nonrespondents. A supplemental survey was administered to a random sample of nonrespondents, who were found to have elevated rates of both lifetime and current psychiatric disorders. The data were weighted to account for sample design (ie, probabilities of selection among households) and for nonresponse using information from the supplemental survey. An additional weight was used to extrapolate the data to the national population by age, sex, race or ethnicity, marital status, educational level, living arrangements, region, and urbanicity (Table 1). Definitions of Mental Illness and Tobacco Use We defined respondents as lifetime smokers if they answered affirmatively to the question, "Have you ever smoked daily for a month or more?" We defined current smokers as those who responded, "in the past month" when they were asked, "When was the last time you smoked fairly regularly—in the past month, past six months, past year, or more than a year ago?" We defined the quit rate as the proportion of lifetime smokers who were not current smokers. Because this definition of quit rate differs from that used in other studies, we also analyzed the data with a more conservative definition of quit rate: the proportion of lifetime smokers who had stopped smoking for more than a year. This analysis did not significantly change our findings; hence, we used the former definition of quit rate. The NCS did not ascertain the total lifetime consumption of tobacco or the current number of cigarettes smoked. However, respondents were asked, "How many cigarettes did you smoke per day during the period when you were smoking most?" We defined this number as peak consumption. We considered persons whose peak consumption exceeded 24 cigarettes per day to be heavy smokers. We defined moderate and light smokers as those whose peak consumption was 24 cigarettes per day or less. We did not analyze cigar or pipe smoking. We defined mental illness as major depression, bipolar disorder, dysthymia, panic disorder, agoraphobia, social phobia, simple phobia, generalized anxiety disorder, alcohol abuse, alcohol dependence, drug abuse, drug dependence, antisocial personality, conduct disorder, or nonaffective psychosis. The latter includes schizophrenia, schizophreniform disorder, schizoaffective disorder, delusional disorder, and atypical psychosis. We analyzed persons with and without any mental illness at any time in their lives (lifetime mental illness), persons with active mental illness in the past month (whom we define as "the mentally ill"), and persons with each of the individual DSM-III-R diagnoses and with multiple DSM-III-R diagnoses. In addition, we compared smoking rates in respondents with current alcohol and drug use to those of respondents who had been abstinent for at least 1 year. We also estimated the proportion of all cigarettes smoked in the United States that were consumed by persons with mental illness via the following calculation: (M) (C1) / {(N) (C2) + (M) (C1)}, where M = the number of current smokers with mental illness in the past month; C1= the mean peak consumption of cigarettes per day by current smokers with mental illness in the past month; N = the number of current smokers without mental illness in the past month, which includes persons with and without lifetime mental illness; and C2= the mean peak consumption of cigarettes per day by current smokers without mental illness in the past month. For both persons with and without mental illness, we assumed that the peak number of cigarettes consumed correlated with the current number of cigarettes consumed. Statistical Methods We used the SAS computer statistical package (Version 7; SAS Institute, Cary, NC). We used the χ2 test to compare differences between groups in the proportion of persons who smoked, and the Mantel Haenszel χ2 test for trend to compare smoking rates with the number of lifetime DSM-III-R diagnoses. We used logistic regression to analyze mental illness as a predictor of smoking, while controlling for sex, age, and region of the United States. Results The demographic characteristics of persons with a lifetime history of mental illness and persons with mental illness in the past month are shown in Table 1. The population prevalence of current smoking was 28.5%, while the lifetime prevalence was 47.1%. Forty-one percent of persons who reported having mental illness in the past month were current smokers and represented 40.6% of all current smokers in the United States. Respondents with a history of mental illness had elevated smoking rates, and smoking rates increased further in respondents with mental illness in the past month (Table 2). Current smokers without mental illness in the past month (n = 746) had a mean peak consumption of 22.6 cigarettes per day vs 26.2 in those with mental illness in the past month (n = 511). We estimated that persons with mental illness comprised 44.3% of the US tobacco market. The relationship between smoking and mental illness persisted when we controlled for age, sex, and geographic region using logistic regression (details available on request). Compared with respondents without mental illness, those with any history of mental illness were significantly more likely to be lifetime smokers (odds ratio [OR], 2.1; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.9-2.4) or current smokers (OR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.7-2.2). This relationship was stronger among respondents with mental illness in the past month (OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 2.3-3.1 for current smokers; OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 2.4-3.2 for lifetime smokers). Persons with multiple lifetime psychiatric diagnoses had higher rates of smoking and smoked more heavily than persons with only 1 DSM-III-R diagnosis (P<.001, Figure 1). Heavy smoking was rare in persons with no history of mental illness; only 10% of such persons were heavy smokers. We observed a dose-response relationship between the number of lifetime psychiatric diagnoses and smoking rates. Quit rates were lower in smokers with mental illness in the past month (30.5%, P<.0001) and in smokers with any lifetime history of mental illness (37.1%, P = .04) compared with smokers without mental illness (42.5%). Table 3 and Table 4 show smoking rates according to psychiatric diagnosis (lifetime and in the past month), as well as the corresponding quit rates. The quit rates of respondents who were abstinent from alcohol (41.5%) or drugs (39.0%) were similar to the quit rate of persons with no mental illness history (42.5%). Due to small numbers in some diagnostic categories, differences between individual diagnoses should be interpreted cautiously. Comment We found that persons with mental illness are about twice as likely to smoke as other persons, a finding consistent with previous studies.4,6,19,20 Population-based data collected in the early 1980s by the Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study showed that persons with major depression, dysthymia, agoraphobia, and alcoholism were 1.6 to 4.7 times more likely to have ever smoked than subjects without mental illness.6 However, we observed that more than a third of patients with a history of mental illness had quit smoking by the time of the survey. The quit rate in the Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study was lower than this and was only determined for persons with major depression. Our finding that persons abstinent from alcohol had quit rates equal to those of persons without mental illness confirms previous findings.21 However, our finding that persons abstinent from drugs also had quit rates equal to those of persons without mental illness is a novel one. Our study is based on data collected from 1991 to 1992 and released for public use in 1998, the most recent national data available on mental illness and smoking. Given the minimal decline in the prevalence of smoking in the United States over the past decade, from 26.5% in 1992 to 24.7% in 1997,22 our findings are still pertinent. Similarly, we doubt that the prevalence of mental illness has decreased dramatically since 1992. In the NCS, almost half of the respondents had experienced a DSM-III-R–defined mental illness in their lifetime, and 28% had experienced mental illness in the past month. These numbers appear high because the definition of mental illness in the NCS (the standard definition used by most psychiatrists in the United States) encompassed a broad spectrum of severity, from simple phobia to schizophrenia. Mentally-ill cigarette smokers, like other smokers, are at high risk of smoking-related deaths. Persons with major depression, alcohol disorders, and schizophrenia have high mortality rates from vascular disease and cancer.23 Smoking also complicates the treatment of some mental disorders by decreasing blood levels of neuroleptics.24 Thus, smokers may require larger doses to achieve therapeutic effect, and thereby run an increased risk of adverse effects.13,25,26 Some26,27 but not all28,29 studies have found that smokers experience more tardive dyskinesia than nonsmokers. Why do the mentally ill smoke more? Some have suggested that such persons use cigarettes as a means of self-medication of psychiatric symptoms.13,30 This theory implicitly assumes that mental illness causes smoking. However, recent findings9,10,31 raise questions about the direction of causality. In a study of childhood and adolescent depression,31 antecedent smoking was associated with an increased risk of depression, but not vice-versa. Similarly, current smokers have an elevated risk of first-time occurrence of panic attacks relative to nonsmokers or former smokers,10 and smoking may increase the risk of certain anxiety disorders during late adolescence and early adulthood.32 Lastly, a recent study9 found that smoking preceded the onset of schizophrenia in the majority of persons with schizophrenia who smoked. Internal documents from the tobacco industry suggest that the industry has identified psychologically vulnerable persons as a part of their tobacco market. In the 1981 Segmentation Study,33 market researchers at R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co described smokers who smoked for "mood enhancement" and "positive stimulation." This marketing study implied that smokers used nicotine for depressive symptoms, stating that smoking "helps perk you up" and "helps you think out problems." The authors also identified the role of smoking in "anxiety relief," stating that smoking helped people "gain self-control," "calm down," and "cope with stress." While studies have shown that cigarette advertising and promotion influence smoking in adolescents,34 no studies have examined the effect of cigarette advertising on the mentally ill. Extrapolating our results to the US population, we estimate that persons with a diagnosable mental disorder in the past month consume nearly half of all cigarettes smoked in the United States. Our findings emphasize the importance of focusing smoking prevention and cessation efforts on the mentally ill. Individual clinicians' efforts in this regard need to be coupled with broader public policy interventions. Increases in tobacco taxes and antismoking media campaigns have been shown to reduce cigarette sales and consumption,35-38 particularly in lower-income smokers.37 While data are not available on the impact of tobacco taxation on the subpopulation of smokers with mental illness, we believe that taxation might be an effective smoking deterrent in this group, which tends to be at a low-income level. Tax revenues could then be used to fund smoking cessation and other programs for persons with mental illness and to support counter-advertising campaigns. Mental illness carries a unique burden of suffering—an "inexplicable agony"—according to one eloquent victim.39 The mentally ill also carry the burden of nearly half of all US tobacco consumption. However, the fact that smokers with mental illness are able to quit should offer hope. References 1. US Department of Health and Human Services. Health Consequences of Smoking Cessation: A Report of the Surgeon General. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office; 1994:124. 2. Ebrahim SH, Floyd RL, Merritt RK, Decoufle P, Holtzman D. Trends in pregnancy-related smoking rates in the United States, 1987-1996. JAMA.2000;283:361-366.Google Scholar 3. Anda RF, Croft JB, Felitti VJ. et al. Adverse childhood experiences and smoking during adolescence and adulthood. JAMA.1999;282:1652-1658.Google Scholar 4. Hughes JR, Hatsukami DK, Mitchell JE, Dahlgren LA. Prevalence of smoking among psychiatric outpatients. Am J Psychiatry.1986;143:993-997.Google Scholar 5. De Leon J, Dadvand M, Canuso C, White AO, Stanilla JK, Simpson GM. Schizophrenia and smoking: an epidemiological survey in a state hospital. Am J Psychiatry.1995;152:453-455.Google Scholar 6. Glassman AH, Helzer JE, Covio LS. et al. Smoking, smoking cessation, and major depression. JAMA.1990;264:1546-1549.Google Scholar 7. Gonzalez-Pinto A, Gutierrez M, Ezcurra J. et al. Tobacco smoking and bipolar disorder. J Clin Psychiatry.1998;59:225-228.Google Scholar 8. Breslau N. Psychiatric comorbidity of smoking and nicotine dependence. Behav Genet.1995;25:95-101.Google Scholar 9. Kelly C, McCreadie RG. Smoking habits, current symptoms, and premorbid characteristics of schizophrenic patients in Nithsdale, Scotland. Am J Psychiatry.1999;156:1751-1757.Google Scholar 10. Breslau N, Klein DF. Smoking and panic attacks: an epidemiologic investigation. Arch Gen Psychiatry.1999;56:1141-1147.Google Scholar 11. Goff DC, Henderson DC, Amico E. Cigarette smoking in schizophrenia: relationship to psychopathology and medication side effects. Am J Psychiatry.1992;149:1189-1194.Google Scholar 12. Ziedonis DM, George TP. Schizophrenia and nicotine use: report of a pilot smoking cessation program and review of neurobiological and clinical issues. Schizophr Bull.1997;23:247-254.Google Scholar 13. Addington J, el Guebaly N, Campbell W, Hodgins DC, Addington D. Smoking cessation treatment for patients with schizophrenia. Am J Psychiatry.1998;155:974-976.Google Scholar 14. Kessler RC, Ronald C. National Comorbidity Survey, 1990-1992 [computer file]. Ann Arbor, Mich: Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research; 2000. 15. Kessler RC, McGonagle KA, Zhao S. et al. Lifetime and 12-month prevalence of DSM-III-R psychiatric disorders in the United States: results from the National Comorbidity Survey. Arch Gen Psychiatry.1994;51:8-19.Google Scholar 16. American Psychiatric Association. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental, Disorders, Third Edition, Revised. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association; 1987. 17. World Health Organization. Composite International Diagnostic Interview [CIDI Version 1.0]. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization. 18. Robin LN, Regier DA. Psychiatric Disorders in America: The Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study. New York, NY: Free Press; 1981. 19. Glassman AH. Cigarette smoking: implications for psychiatric illness. Am J Psychiatry.1993;150:546-553.Google Scholar 20. Hughes JR. Possible effects of smoke-free inpatient units on psychiatric diagnosis and treatment. J Clin Psychiatry.1993;54:109-114.Google Scholar 21. Breslau N, Peterson E, Schultz L, Andreski P, Chilcoat H. Are smokers with alcohol disorders less likely to quit? Am J Public Health.1996;86:985-990.Google Scholar 22. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Cigarette smoking among adults: United States, 1997. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/research_data/adults_prev/97adultprevfacts.htm. Accessibility verified October 3, 2000. 23. Bruce ML, Leaf PJ, Rozal GP, Florio L, Hoff RA. Psychiatric status and 9-year mortality data in the New Haven Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study. Am J Psychiatry.1994;151:716-721.Google Scholar 24. Lohr JB, Flynn K. Smoking and schizophrenia. Schizophr Res.1992;8:93-102.Google Scholar 25. Decina P, Caracci G, Sandik R, Berman W, Mukherjee S, Scapicchio PL. Cigarette smoking and neuroleptic-induced parkinsonism. Biol Psychiatry.1990;28:502-508.Google Scholar 26. Yassa R, Lal S, Korpassy A, Ally J. Nicotine exposure and tardive dyskinesia. Biol Psychiatry.1987;22:67-72.Google Scholar 27. Binder RL, Kazamatsuri H, Nishimura T, McNiel DE. Smoking and tardive dyskinesia. Biol Psychiatry.1987;22:1280-1282.Google Scholar 28. Chiles JA, Cohen S, Roland M, Wright R. Smoking and schizophrenic psychopathology. Am J Addict.1993;2:315-319.Google Scholar 29. Menza MA, Grossman N, Van Horn M, Cody R, Forman N. Smoking and movement disorders in psychiatric patients. Biol Psychiatry.1991;30:109-115.Google Scholar 30. Carmody TP. Affect regulation, nicotine addiction, and smoking cessation. J Psychoactive Drugs.1989;24:111-122.Google Scholar 31. Wu L, Anthony JC. Tobacco smoking and depressed mood in late childhood and early adolescence. Am J Public Health.1999;89:1837-1840.Google Scholar 32. Johnson JG, Cohen P, Pine DS, Klein DF, Kasen S, Brook JS. Association between cigarette smoking and anxiety disorders during adolescence and early adulthood. JAMA.2000;284:2348-2351.Google Scholar 33. Nordine R. 1981 Segmentation study: overview. Available at: http://galen.library.ucsf.edu/tobacco/mangini/html/c/039/; 9-10. Accessibility verified October 3, 2000. 34. Siegel M. Mass media antismoking campaigns: a powerful tool for health promotion. Ann Intern Med.1998;129:128-132.Google Scholar 35. Hu T, Sung H, Keeler T. Reducing cigarette consumption in California: tobacco taxes vs an anti-smoking media campaign. Am J Public Health.1995;85:1218-1222.Google Scholar 36. Pierce JP, Gilpin EA, Emery SL. Has the California tobacco control program reduced smoking? JAMA.1998;280:893-899.Google Scholar 37. Biener L, Aseltine RH, Cohen B, Anderka M. Reactions of adult and teenaged smokers to the Massachusetts tobacco tax. Am J Public Health.1998;88:1389-1391.Google Scholar 38. Siegel M. Mass media antismoking campaigns: a powerful tool for health promotion. Ann Intern Med.1998;129:128-132.Google Scholar 39. Styron W. Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness. New York, NY: Random House; 1990:84. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png JAMA American Medical Association

Smoking and Mental Illness: A Population-Based Prevalence Study

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References (42)

Publisher
American Medical Association
Copyright
Copyright © 2000 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.
ISSN
0098-7484
eISSN
1538-3598
DOI
10.1001/jama.284.20.2606
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See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Abstract Context Studies of selected groups of persons with mental illness, such as those who are institutionalized or seen in mental health clinics, have reported rates of smoking to be higher than in persons without mental illness. However, recent population-based, nationally representative data are lacking. Objective To assess rates of smoking and tobacco cessation in adults, with and without mental illness. Design, Setting, and Participants Analysis of data on 4411 respondents aged 15 to 54 years from the National Comorbidity Survey, a nationally representative multistage probability survey conducted from 1991 to 1992. Main Outcome Measures Rates of smoking and tobacco cessation according to the number and type of psychiatric diagnoses, assessed by a modified version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview. Results Current smoking rates for respondents with no mental illness, lifetime mental illness, and past-month mental illness were 22.5%, 34.8%, and 41.0%, respectively. Lifetime smoking rates were 39.1%, 55.3%, and 59.0%, respectively (P<.001 for all comparisons). Smokers with any history of mental illness had a self-reported quit rate of 37.1% (P = .04), and smokers with past-month mental illness had a self-reported quit rate of 30.5% (P<.001) compared with smokers without mental illness (42.5%). Odds ratios for current and lifetime smoking in respondents with mental illness in the past month vs respondents without mental illness, adjusted for age, sex, and region of the country, were 2.7 (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.3-3.1) and 2.7 (95% CI, 2.4-3.2), respectively. Persons with a mental disorder in the past month consumed approximately 44.3% of cigarettes smoked by this nationally representative sample. Conclusions Persons with mental illness are about twice as likely to smoke as other persons but have substantial quit rates. Smoking is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States.1 In an effort to target public health interventions, recent studies have focused on smoking in distinct populations, such as pregnant women2 and adolescents.3 We believe those with mental illness are another group that merits special attention. Previous studies have found high smoking rates among selected populations of persons with mental illness, such as psychiatric outpatients4 and patients in a state mental hospital.5 Others have found elevated smoking rates among patients with specific diagnoses, such as bipolar illness, depression, schizophrenia, and panic disorder.6-11 Persons with mental illness may encounter greater difficulty with tobacco cessation.4,12,13 However, no recent study has analyzed rates of smoking and quit rates across the spectrum of psychiatric diagnoses in a nationally representative sample. We hypothesized that persons with mental illness smoke at higher rates than persons without mental illness, have lower quit rates, and comprise a large proportion of the US tobacco market. We used population-based data from the National Comorbidity Survey14 (NCS) to examine the association between type and severity of mental illness and the likelihood of smoking and subsequent cessation. The NCS differed from previous studies because it was the first to administer a structured psychiatric interview to a nationally representative sample.15 Furthermore, the NCS was specifically designed to examine both substance-use and nonsubstance-use psychiatric disorders. Methods Data Sources The NCS was a congressionally mandated study of the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in the United States.15 Administered between September 1990 and February 1992, the survey used a stratified, multistage probability sample of persons aged 15 to 54 years in the noninstitutionalized civilian population. The data were released for public use in 1998. The study design allowed for estimation of the national prevalence of mental illness as defined by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition, Revised (DSM-III-R).16 The NCS surveyed 8098 persons. Questions regarding tobacco use were asked of the 4411 respondents interviewed during the latter half of the survey (1991-1992). Specially trained staff from the Survey Research Center at the University of Michigan administered a modified version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI).17 The CIDI is a well-validated, structured diagnostic interview based on the Diagnostic Interview Schedule (DIS), which was used in the Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study.18 In the NCS, the overall response rate was 82.4%; nonrespondents resembled respondents in age and sex, which are the only demographic variables available for all nonrespondents. A supplemental survey was administered to a random sample of nonrespondents, who were found to have elevated rates of both lifetime and current psychiatric disorders. The data were weighted to account for sample design (ie, probabilities of selection among households) and for nonresponse using information from the supplemental survey. An additional weight was used to extrapolate the data to the national population by age, sex, race or ethnicity, marital status, educational level, living arrangements, region, and urbanicity (Table 1). Definitions of Mental Illness and Tobacco Use We defined respondents as lifetime smokers if they answered affirmatively to the question, "Have you ever smoked daily for a month or more?" We defined current smokers as those who responded, "in the past month" when they were asked, "When was the last time you smoked fairly regularly—in the past month, past six months, past year, or more than a year ago?" We defined the quit rate as the proportion of lifetime smokers who were not current smokers. Because this definition of quit rate differs from that used in other studies, we also analyzed the data with a more conservative definition of quit rate: the proportion of lifetime smokers who had stopped smoking for more than a year. This analysis did not significantly change our findings; hence, we used the former definition of quit rate. The NCS did not ascertain the total lifetime consumption of tobacco or the current number of cigarettes smoked. However, respondents were asked, "How many cigarettes did you smoke per day during the period when you were smoking most?" We defined this number as peak consumption. We considered persons whose peak consumption exceeded 24 cigarettes per day to be heavy smokers. We defined moderate and light smokers as those whose peak consumption was 24 cigarettes per day or less. We did not analyze cigar or pipe smoking. We defined mental illness as major depression, bipolar disorder, dysthymia, panic disorder, agoraphobia, social phobia, simple phobia, generalized anxiety disorder, alcohol abuse, alcohol dependence, drug abuse, drug dependence, antisocial personality, conduct disorder, or nonaffective psychosis. The latter includes schizophrenia, schizophreniform disorder, schizoaffective disorder, delusional disorder, and atypical psychosis. We analyzed persons with and without any mental illness at any time in their lives (lifetime mental illness), persons with active mental illness in the past month (whom we define as "the mentally ill"), and persons with each of the individual DSM-III-R diagnoses and with multiple DSM-III-R diagnoses. In addition, we compared smoking rates in respondents with current alcohol and drug use to those of respondents who had been abstinent for at least 1 year. We also estimated the proportion of all cigarettes smoked in the United States that were consumed by persons with mental illness via the following calculation: (M) (C1) / {(N) (C2) + (M) (C1)}, where M = the number of current smokers with mental illness in the past month; C1= the mean peak consumption of cigarettes per day by current smokers with mental illness in the past month; N = the number of current smokers without mental illness in the past month, which includes persons with and without lifetime mental illness; and C2= the mean peak consumption of cigarettes per day by current smokers without mental illness in the past month. For both persons with and without mental illness, we assumed that the peak number of cigarettes consumed correlated with the current number of cigarettes consumed. Statistical Methods We used the SAS computer statistical package (Version 7; SAS Institute, Cary, NC). We used the χ2 test to compare differences between groups in the proportion of persons who smoked, and the Mantel Haenszel χ2 test for trend to compare smoking rates with the number of lifetime DSM-III-R diagnoses. We used logistic regression to analyze mental illness as a predictor of smoking, while controlling for sex, age, and region of the United States. Results The demographic characteristics of persons with a lifetime history of mental illness and persons with mental illness in the past month are shown in Table 1. The population prevalence of current smoking was 28.5%, while the lifetime prevalence was 47.1%. Forty-one percent of persons who reported having mental illness in the past month were current smokers and represented 40.6% of all current smokers in the United States. Respondents with a history of mental illness had elevated smoking rates, and smoking rates increased further in respondents with mental illness in the past month (Table 2). Current smokers without mental illness in the past month (n = 746) had a mean peak consumption of 22.6 cigarettes per day vs 26.2 in those with mental illness in the past month (n = 511). We estimated that persons with mental illness comprised 44.3% of the US tobacco market. The relationship between smoking and mental illness persisted when we controlled for age, sex, and geographic region using logistic regression (details available on request). Compared with respondents without mental illness, those with any history of mental illness were significantly more likely to be lifetime smokers (odds ratio [OR], 2.1; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.9-2.4) or current smokers (OR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.7-2.2). This relationship was stronger among respondents with mental illness in the past month (OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 2.3-3.1 for current smokers; OR, 2.7; 95% CI, 2.4-3.2 for lifetime smokers). Persons with multiple lifetime psychiatric diagnoses had higher rates of smoking and smoked more heavily than persons with only 1 DSM-III-R diagnosis (P<.001, Figure 1). Heavy smoking was rare in persons with no history of mental illness; only 10% of such persons were heavy smokers. We observed a dose-response relationship between the number of lifetime psychiatric diagnoses and smoking rates. Quit rates were lower in smokers with mental illness in the past month (30.5%, P<.0001) and in smokers with any lifetime history of mental illness (37.1%, P = .04) compared with smokers without mental illness (42.5%). Table 3 and Table 4 show smoking rates according to psychiatric diagnosis (lifetime and in the past month), as well as the corresponding quit rates. The quit rates of respondents who were abstinent from alcohol (41.5%) or drugs (39.0%) were similar to the quit rate of persons with no mental illness history (42.5%). Due to small numbers in some diagnostic categories, differences between individual diagnoses should be interpreted cautiously. Comment We found that persons with mental illness are about twice as likely to smoke as other persons, a finding consistent with previous studies.4,6,19,20 Population-based data collected in the early 1980s by the Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study showed that persons with major depression, dysthymia, agoraphobia, and alcoholism were 1.6 to 4.7 times more likely to have ever smoked than subjects without mental illness.6 However, we observed that more than a third of patients with a history of mental illness had quit smoking by the time of the survey. The quit rate in the Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study was lower than this and was only determined for persons with major depression. Our finding that persons abstinent from alcohol had quit rates equal to those of persons without mental illness confirms previous findings.21 However, our finding that persons abstinent from drugs also had quit rates equal to those of persons without mental illness is a novel one. Our study is based on data collected from 1991 to 1992 and released for public use in 1998, the most recent national data available on mental illness and smoking. Given the minimal decline in the prevalence of smoking in the United States over the past decade, from 26.5% in 1992 to 24.7% in 1997,22 our findings are still pertinent. Similarly, we doubt that the prevalence of mental illness has decreased dramatically since 1992. In the NCS, almost half of the respondents had experienced a DSM-III-R–defined mental illness in their lifetime, and 28% had experienced mental illness in the past month. These numbers appear high because the definition of mental illness in the NCS (the standard definition used by most psychiatrists in the United States) encompassed a broad spectrum of severity, from simple phobia to schizophrenia. Mentally-ill cigarette smokers, like other smokers, are at high risk of smoking-related deaths. Persons with major depression, alcohol disorders, and schizophrenia have high mortality rates from vascular disease and cancer.23 Smoking also complicates the treatment of some mental disorders by decreasing blood levels of neuroleptics.24 Thus, smokers may require larger doses to achieve therapeutic effect, and thereby run an increased risk of adverse effects.13,25,26 Some26,27 but not all28,29 studies have found that smokers experience more tardive dyskinesia than nonsmokers. Why do the mentally ill smoke more? Some have suggested that such persons use cigarettes as a means of self-medication of psychiatric symptoms.13,30 This theory implicitly assumes that mental illness causes smoking. However, recent findings9,10,31 raise questions about the direction of causality. In a study of childhood and adolescent depression,31 antecedent smoking was associated with an increased risk of depression, but not vice-versa. Similarly, current smokers have an elevated risk of first-time occurrence of panic attacks relative to nonsmokers or former smokers,10 and smoking may increase the risk of certain anxiety disorders during late adolescence and early adulthood.32 Lastly, a recent study9 found that smoking preceded the onset of schizophrenia in the majority of persons with schizophrenia who smoked. Internal documents from the tobacco industry suggest that the industry has identified psychologically vulnerable persons as a part of their tobacco market. In the 1981 Segmentation Study,33 market researchers at R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co described smokers who smoked for "mood enhancement" and "positive stimulation." This marketing study implied that smokers used nicotine for depressive symptoms, stating that smoking "helps perk you up" and "helps you think out problems." The authors also identified the role of smoking in "anxiety relief," stating that smoking helped people "gain self-control," "calm down," and "cope with stress." While studies have shown that cigarette advertising and promotion influence smoking in adolescents,34 no studies have examined the effect of cigarette advertising on the mentally ill. Extrapolating our results to the US population, we estimate that persons with a diagnosable mental disorder in the past month consume nearly half of all cigarettes smoked in the United States. Our findings emphasize the importance of focusing smoking prevention and cessation efforts on the mentally ill. Individual clinicians' efforts in this regard need to be coupled with broader public policy interventions. Increases in tobacco taxes and antismoking media campaigns have been shown to reduce cigarette sales and consumption,35-38 particularly in lower-income smokers.37 While data are not available on the impact of tobacco taxation on the subpopulation of smokers with mental illness, we believe that taxation might be an effective smoking deterrent in this group, which tends to be at a low-income level. Tax revenues could then be used to fund smoking cessation and other programs for persons with mental illness and to support counter-advertising campaigns. Mental illness carries a unique burden of suffering—an "inexplicable agony"—according to one eloquent victim.39 The mentally ill also carry the burden of nearly half of all US tobacco consumption. However, the fact that smokers with mental illness are able to quit should offer hope. References 1. 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Journal

JAMAAmerican Medical Association

Published: Nov 22, 2000

Keywords: smoking,mental disorders,diagnosis, psychiatric,smoke,cigarettes

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